After months of criticism, Captain Copyright goes offline for revision.
The Swedish Pirate Party (PiratPartiet) has given their backing to a commercial anonymizing service, which promises no loss of speed for €5 a month.
Captain Copyright controversy forces Access Copyright to defend its position.
Canadian Library Association takes on Captain Copyright.
Reports of Government paying lobbyists that represent groups like Access Copyright circulate.
Controversy arises over another cartoon character.
A long list of groups talk about privacy over DRM in Canada.
File-sharing? No DRM? Canadian 'Indie' Labels: "No problem!"
Congress readies a new Copyright Bill
ISP imposes severe bandwidth restrictions on its "heavy users".
April 23, 2006
by Mark Finn
TiVO and the MPAA testify on the future of consumer electronics and fair use.
March 30, 2006
by Thomas Mennecke
Two New Jersey bills look may hinder free speech online.
March 14, 2006
by Thomas Mennecke
Details are emerging that British Telecom (aka “BT”) is in the process of concluding a content deal with Dutch owned TV production giant Endemol as part of an ambitious plan for a major launch in the ipTV market later this year.
There has been a new development in the podcasting world, as another Canadian station distributes their news via podcasting.
And Limewire.com isn't too far behind.
December 21, 2005
by Thomas Mennecke